Usa~^r> rrz&x ll ijjw* r- ’*'. . v . 1 Mrs. Charles B. Trammel, Jr„ and children of Elkin, N. C. are visiting Mrs. C. R. Hamrick and Rev. and Mrs. C. B. Trammel here this week. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Owers and daughter, Elizabeth, visited r< la tives in Forest City Sunday. Mrs. Wilma Ketchum and child ren, Teddy and Debra, of Orlando, Florida spent last week in Burns ville with Mrs. Kctchum’s parents, Mr. aid Mrs. W. L. Allen. Charles Adair has .been commen ded by North Carolina State Col la- e for his attainment of an out standing scholastic record during the 1960-61 academic year. He/is a rising senior and the son of Mr. ami Mrs. Ralph Adair of Burrs ville. Mrs Lonas Butner is in Yancey Hospital taking treatmert for a broken hip which she sustained in a fall at her home. Rev. and Mrs. Wade Duncan and two children have moved to Burnsville, they reside in the Penland building beside the Yan cey Upholstery. Rev. Duncan is pastor of The Church of God of Prophecy here. NOTICE Dr. Melvin W. Webb will be out of his office from Thursday, August 31 through Thursday, September 7. YOUR SOCIAC SEURITY By: Lucille M. Rickman Field Representative There was one recent change in the social security law that, while minor, directly or indirectly af fects everybody under 72 receiving old-age or survivors insurance benefits. This was a change in I DAY OF Ti-SE WEEK! I I Specials-Friday & Saturday, August 25-26 1 I Crisco Shorten- _ I ing, 3 lb. tin # # I C I DEL MONTE A A I PINEAPPLE- /Wf Orange Juice 46 oz. 9H- B DEL MONTE ft A I SLICED Pineapple jC jC# I No. 2 can I Tony Dog Food A£ B - 3 cans for- m3C RAY BROS. FOOD CENTER ■ _ 01*1 MO M4M NBXT DOO* TO rote OFTOI* BURNSVILLE. N. C. " ■ ! I AMPLE PARKING SPACE BY SIDE OF BUILDING 9 ■ 1 * iri fil m*tn » I > the so-called “retirement test.” ' L T ndcr the old law, a person 1 could earn $1,200 and receive all i of his monthly social security benefits. $1 in benefits was with* * held, however, for each $2 lv j • earned from $1,200 to $1,500, and; $1 for each $1 eame for each dollar earned over $1,700. This means that undf r the new j law a person eligible for social i security benefits may earn up to $1,700 and receive mere in total earnings and benefits than under the old law. Os course, for each $1 earned over i withheld in benefits. | An important part of this change, too, is that it applies to earrings for this yt ar. People who are receiving benefits asd earning $1,500 or more may get more in formation about this by inquiring at the Asheville Social Security Office at 40 North French Broad ! Avenue. - There is no change in the pro-1 vision that, regardless of how i much a beneficiary earns in a year, he will get a benefit check for any month in which he neither earns more than SIOO in wages nor performs substantial services in self-employment, or is age 72 or over. A number of widows age 62 or , older are now getting retirement , benefits based on their own work under social security. Because of ■ the chasge in the law increasing . widow’s benefits, it is possible that \ some o fthese widows now getting | monthly retirement benefits of , less than SIOO basted on their ows | work will be able to qualify for higher amounts, by applying for the widows benefits payable on their husbands’ accounts. A widow now collecting her own . retirement benefit can find out ; whether this change in the law i applies t 0 her by asking at her i nearest social security office. ] jr *•'. ] -» jrifl Ik wHmPESEIP * ... *ri mrnm JNiP i ■ ** IMm HMMioBHBWfc •wSFtß'S**’'• *““* "*V***¥.» . ■ ; f TriKflßilili*. w . 3^y£%*sßßP> j - ■. » K r - 3B }. * . m s mmmrr pr.*- eT r,*^wp^'ihr & ii w* Wtf '* w v Si 1 Mb . '*f* j -' A . j »h t % - - fir ■>6 ft .31 ■ clelfijUk l|r •—■•Win, < , . S. w jg »4k- I?; | ?. k?' ' ' T - -3* Ifflnc *.v .Ja? ’ yir ™ ? *K j' ?y "I k- - ' Southern grown cotton attracted considerable interest at the annual Countv 4-H rtuh'• held recently at Mayfair shopping center in Milwaukee, Wis. Carpi Anderson f«sttmm le^', S VP erior - Wis > Alice Dairyland for 1961, admired some of the award winning d?es»e« ‘ Vs, th 4-H representatives. Providing a fitting background for the theme of Xing Cottoniai .A IllC_ C* bQ 1 rvi rtrn* r,r\4 i* —.. 1U X __ 1 I A > a.< ■ aU m “ "“"II Vpfv/» vOll IS I THE YANrrr RECORD THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, JtH»l v Free Wheeling By B£l Crowell j With schools about to open it’s i a sad duty to relate that traffic ~ n recent years lias become the No. 1 killer of school aged y’oung ■LTb, replacing such dread and eng established killers as pneu monia and cancer. In North Carolina every fourth .person killed on the highways .ast year was a u>t or a teenagtr, according to records-; of the De partment of Motor Vehicles. - The same agency says the fight , Irgainst this “traffic disiase” is andei.iably a serious problem. But .c is a problem not without a solution. It calls for a stepping up of the low, patient, persistent assault lpon the complexity of factors /hich, acting together, produce a raffic accident. The factors themselves have been endlessly publicized by safety authorities, disregard of traffic laws, careless ness, discourtesy. Therefore, one of the most difficult barrier's con fronting great, r traffic safety is j public apathy—the failure 0 f peo ple to recognize that traffic pro .ection is a mutual responsibility for all. * It becomes a question of unre mitting importance as school bells begin to ring and streets and highways are crowded with youngsters. Under such conditions there can be n 0 tolerance of the careless, indifferent driver. Nor can there be any let up in safety ( instruction for our youngsters in the home and in their classrooms. Without a sense of personal re sponsibility none of us can be as sured that our children are safe from death and injury in traffic. This responsibility for parents means constant safety education ATTENTION I Yancey County Farmers .* - v-vV •, ’4*|«san\ >%: Let us Deliver and spread your Lime before the Fall Rush The sooner you get it on the sooner you will get results. Spread on your Fi rm for only $6.00 per ton MAYMEAD LIME CO. PArk 7-3332 SHOUNS, TENN. in the home, toadying youngsters safe practices in walking rom school and when In traffic. For teachers,' it’s a continuous ’ ana re-emphasis of parental a«fl -*ty instructions, carried out faith! fully through the school day. And for m itorists, it's a sober realization thit children ate un preuictable, calling for a de liberate reduction r of speed ih school and residential ar.as and a constast awareness that children are near. If parents and the schools fuL till their duties by drilling safety habits as a sixth sense into oiir youngters and motorists learn py protect child life, there’s little doubt that in time we can bring this killer under control. And the time to start is now. SQUARE COIN? .. . 1U« cent piece won’t roll far g dropped by Mari Frederlcha mt Aruba, Netherlahd* West T njfM' Another feature of the Carlbbsaa island: free public telephones.